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W H Smith Travel has unveiled the next 12 titles in its Fresh
Talent promotion, including one self-published novel and another published
through crowd-funding platform Urbane.
The retailer said the first dozen titles in its Fresh Talent
promotion, which launched in February and aims to promote new and emerging
writers, went from “strength to strength” in sales terms.
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E L James’ Grey
(Vintage) handily retained its number one position in the USA print
bestseller charts, although volume sales declined by a almost third
week-on-week.
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Claire Fuller has won the Desmond Elliott Prize 2015 for her
novel Our Endless
Numbered Days (Fig Tree).
Our Endless Numbered Days was described by chair
of the judges Louise Doughty as "both shocking and subtle, brilliant
and beautiful, a poised and elegant work that recalls the early work of Ian
McEwan in the delicacy of its prose and the way that this is combined with
some very dark undertones".
The Desmond Elliott Prize is given to debut fiction and is
worth £10,000 to the winner.
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HarperNonFiction has bought a “unique” escapist’s guide to
climbing trees for a “strong five-figure sum” in a “hotly contested”
five-publisher auction.
The Treeclimber’s Guide to London by
Jack Cooke can be read as “either a practical guide or a daydreamer’s
handbook”.
Publishing director Jack Fogg bought world rights to the book
from Claudia Young at Greene and Heaton.
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A collection of essays from Zadie Smith, a novel critiquing
the concept of romantic love by Alain de Botton and Marina Lewycka’s first
book in four years are among the highlights of Penguin General’s spring
2016 list.
Authors and staff from Penguin General – which comprises of
imprints Penguin, Hamish Hamilton, Viking, Fig Tree and Portfolio –
presented the highlights at a showcase in Waterstones Piccadilly last night
(Wednesday 1st July).
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Nine initiatives in scholarly publishing have been shortlisted
for the 2015 Association of Learned & Professional Society Publishers
(ALPSP) Innovation in Publishing awards.
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Octopus has revealed the full programme for its inaugural food
and drink festival, Cookbook Confidential.
The event, announced
in May, will take place at the Southbank Centre on Saturday 5th September
in partnership with Foyles, which is the official bookseller for the
festival.
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Exam preparation app Gojimo has reached its £500,000
crowdfunding target.
The app offers 50,000 free curriculum specific quiz questions,
and content from publishers such as Oxford University Press and McGraw-Hill
Education is available through in-app purchases.
Gojimo, which says it has 300,000 monthly active users, aimed
to raise half a million through the London-based crowdfunding platform,
CrowdBnk.
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Bloomsbury Children’s Books has acquired the rights to the
middle grade action adventure series Spy
Toys by Mark Powers.
In the series the world’s biggest toy manufacturer makes toys
with computerised brains for the rich and famous. Dan (a Snugliffic Cuddlestar
bear) has a faulty chip so is thrown on a reject pile, where he is invited,
along with a doll and a robot rabbit, to join the ‘Spy Toys’. Their first
mission is to protect the prime minister's eight-year-old son from being
kidnapped.
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Production company Kindle Entertainment has bought the rights
to develop David Melling’s Hugless Douglas character into a TV show.
The deal was brokered by Karen Lawler, executive manager of licensing at
Hachette Children’s Group (HCG), and Nirmal Sandhu, head of rights at HCG,
with Val Ames, director of production at Kindle Entertainment.
Kindle is currently developing 52 11-minute TV shows for the pre-school
audience, although no broadcast deals have yet been signed.
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Author Lucy Beresford is launching an initiative to create a
library at one of the London shelters for domestic violence charity Refuge.
Beresford said: “I'm launching an initiative called Refuge for Books,
asking all my friends in the publishing world to send me a copy of a book
for Refuge. One of Refuge's London shelters is going to create a library
out of the books.”
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Kate Manning, former sales and marketing director of Hot Key
Books, is moving to The
Phoenix Comic, which is published by David Fickling Books.
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